But the state has no execution chamber for its lone death row inmate: Michael Addison, convicted in 2008 of shooting Manchester police officer Michael Briggs.

So many people signed up to testify at Tuesday’s hearing that it was moved into the state House of Representatives' main hall. Most were in favor of repeal, but a handful of lawmakers – including former U.S. Senator and state attorney general Kelly Ayotte – spoke against it.

They argue it would commute Addison’s death sentence to life imprisonment without parole, though it’s not clear from the text of the bill if or how that would happen.

If it does, said Rep. Al Baldasaro, a Republican who supports the death penalty: “Okay, he’s in jail for the rest of his life. … That officer’s death will never be, you know, taken care of.”

A church leader speaks against the New Hampshire's death penalty at a legislative committee hearing Tuesday

Credit Annie Ropeik / NHPR

Most who testified at the hearing want the repeal to pass. They wore buttons that said “not in my name,” and argued the death penalty doesn’t deter crime and costs too much.

"In thinking about the state’s power to kill, we should consider, one, whether we really believe that the state should have the power at all, and two, whether we believe that the government can be trusted to kill without error,” said retired Superior Court judge Art Brennan. “For me, the answer to both questions is no."

Other speakers included family members of murder victims who said capital punishment wouldn’t benefit them – as well as faith leaders, like Pastor Jon Hopkins of Concord.

"We have the death penalty not because it prevents crimes, but so we can get revenge. From a spiritual standpoint, revenge is harmful,” he said. “It does not help us heal or move on; instead it leaves us cold and lost."

State legislators have voted several times to repeal New Hampshire's death penalty. But governors Jeanne Shaheen and Chris Sununu vetoed the repeals that made it to their desk.

Sununu promised to do the same if the bill passes this year. It would need a wide margin of support—two-thirds of members present in each the House and the Senate—to override that veto.

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Governor Chris Sununu signaled he'd veto the death penalty repeal long before lawmakers sent one to his desk. So, at the event his press team billed as an announcement on the repeal bill, the only real suspense was over how many police officers Sununu could squeeze into his office to witness his veto.

The New Hampshire Senate failed to override Gov. Chris Sununu’s veto of a death penalty repeal bill on Thursday.

As it did during the session, the Senate voted 14-10 in favor of repeal, which fell short of the two-thirds majority needed to overturn the veto.

The House and Senate both passed Senate Bill 593 repealing the use of the death penalty this session, but Sununu called it the “ultimate legal deterrent” and an important way to deliver justice for victims of crime.